Linkin Park were filming a new video a few days ago, as you may recall, however a majority of us thought it was for their upcoming single ‘LOST IN THE ECHO’, while some were correct in spotting that it couldn’t be LOST IN THE ECHO. Turns out it’s actually a video for the upcoming Medal of Honor Warfighter game. Meaning the pictures we posted a while back are actually from the set of CASTLE OF GLASS! While they joke about the new video saying that it’d be Chester in boxer shorts, read below what they said about it:

When Linkin Park were approached by Electronic Arts about contributing their song “CASTLE OF GLASS” to the upcoming “Medal of Honor Warfighter” game, they knew they’d be shooting a video … they just weren’t aware it’d be a video like this.

“Remember the video where the band was playing on Pamela Anderson, and she’s in a bikini and she ate the band?” LP’s Chester Bennington told MTV News, referencing, of course, Lit’s epochal “Miserable” clip. “That’s what we’re doing, only it’s going to be me, in boxer shorts. It’s going to be great.”

“And there are going to be soldiers running around on top of Chester,” Mike Shinoda added. “The guys from EA [came up with the idea] … we weren’t planning to go this direction with it; we were like ‘You know, let’s do a video with the band playing, and soldiers, and make it like the game,’ and they were like ‘No, we want to see Chester naked!'”

Of course, we suspect they’re only kidding about the nudity, because when MTV News was on the set of the “CASTLE” video shoot in Los Angeles, we didn’t see Bennington in his boxers (not even when we barged into his dressing room). But we did see plenty of green-screen-aided performance footage of Linkin Park, which will be cut into the clip and subsequently used in promotion with the hotly anticipated “Warfighter,” due in stores October 23.

And “CASTLE OF GLASS” is a fitting choice to be included in the game, which explores the personal side of war … namely, the lives of the soldiers fighting it, and the many sacrifices they and their families make. Because when Linkin Park spoke to MTV News back in June about the making of their LIVING THINGS album, they not only mentioned the song as being one of their favorites, but mentioned that its lyrics were partially inspired by the stories of soldiers returning from combat and trying to find their place in society.

“This album tends to be a little more of a personal record, compared to the last record, which I guess I would say was a little more political. And this song is an example of that; the lyrics can have multiple meanings, be it a soldier’s story [or] an individual at home, dealing with a personal relationship,” Shinoda said. “[And the video] is really mostly narrative; and it’s kind of the story of the families and the soldiers that this game is based on.”

Disclaimer

This is an unofficial fan site for Linkin Park. We are not affiliated with Linkin Park, their management or family, we do not know them personally nor do we have any contact with any of them. All content on the Mike Shinoda Clan belongs to their rightful owners, copyright infringement is never intended. If there happens to be any legal issue please contact us before taking any action. If you want anything of yours removed, please contact us and we'll remove it immediately.
Please credit us if you take anything from this site. Do NOT hotlink or tag pictures from the picture gallery.